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ARTIST REVIEW LET’S GET READY FOR OUR TRIP TO THE WADSWORTH! . Alexander Calder’s Stegosaurus Calder Was an American Sculptor. . 50 Feet High Made of Steel Plates. Calder Longnose , 1957. Painted Metal Was an engineer Made toys . Calder’s Praying Mantis, 1937. Sculptures Were Abstract.
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ARTIST REVIEW LET’S GET READY FOR OUR TRIP TO THE WADSWORTH!
Alexander Calder’s StegosaurusCalder Was an American Sculptor. • 50 Feet High • Made of Steel Plates
Calder Longnose, 1957 • Painted Metal • Was an engineer • Made toys
Calder’s Praying Mantis, 1937 • Sculptures Were Abstract. • He Coined the Term, Mobile. • He Was Playful.
Calder’s Spider and Fly, 1930’s • He Worked, Mostly in Connecticut. • He Sculpted With Wire and Made Abstract Mobiles.
Picasso, Still Life With Fish, 1923 • Paintings showed the front and sides of things, at the same time (Cubism). • He had different periods (blue, rose, cubism. • Picasso was very silly.
Picasso’s The Artist, 1963 • Picasso’s paintings looked like he cut them up and put them back together, in the wrong way. • He painted Sylvette, the girl with the ponytail.
Degas’, Double Portrait Cousins of the Painter, 1868 • He mostly painted horses and ballerinas. • Here he painted his cousins. • He was often a bit rude. • He used oil pastels.
Monet’s, The Church at Vernon, 1883 • Enjoyed painting light and reflection. • Painted outdoors. • Used bright colors, blobs and smears. • Created a beautiful garden.
Renoir, Claude Monet Paining His Garden, 1873 • Worked with Monet. • Painted outdoors. • Used bright colors. • Painted light, like Monet.
Georgia O’Keeffe, The Lawrence Tree, 1929 • She painted close-ups of flowers in bright, bold colors. • She simplified her subjects so that nothing remained except the most important parts. • She simplified her subjects so that nothing remained except the most important parts.
Jackson Pollock, Number 9, 1949 • Splattered and dripped color onto large canvas. • He was an action painter. • He did not use lavender paint, but he often used silver and gold.
Mondrian, Composition in Blue and White, 1935 • Painted primary colors, squares, rectangles and black lines. • He wanted to paint very simply, using simple shapes and colors.
Matisse, The Ostrich-Feather Hat, 1918 • Painted His Daughter, 24 • Usually used exaggerated color • Learned to paint after he was ill for a long time. • He was most famous for his cut paper collages.
Dali, Apparition of Face and Fruit on the Beach, 1938 • Painted Optical Illusions • Painted Dreams • An odd fellow
The Colt Family Cradle, Stuart 1944-1957 • Transformed parts of the Charter Oak into cradle
George Segal's 1971 ''Trapeze,'' • American painter, sculptor • Used plaster casting • a sculpture of plaster, wood, metal and rope • Hangs under a skylight
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